- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/614/A116
- Title:
- Masgomas-6 near-IR spectra
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/614/A116
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Recent near-infrared data have contributed to unveiling massive and obscured stellar populations in both new and previously known clusters in our Galaxy. These discoveries have lead us to view the Milky Way as an active star-forming machine. We look for young massive cluster candidates as over-densities of OB-type stars. The first search, focused on the Galactic direction l=38, resulted in the detection of two objects with a remarkable population of OB-type star candidates. With a modified version of the friends-of-friends algorithm AUTOPOP and using 2MASS and UKIDSS-GPS near-infrared (J, H, and K) photometry for one of our cluster candidates (Masgomas-6) we selected 30 stars for multi-object and long-slit H and K band spectroscopy. With the spectral classification and the near-infrared photometric data, we derive individual distance, extinction, and radial velocity. Of the 30 spectroscopically observed stars, 20 are classified as massive stars, including OB-types (dwarfs, giants and supergiants), two red supergiants, two Wolf-Rayets (WR122-11 and the new WR122-16), and one transitional object (the LBV candidate IRAS 18576+0341). The individual distances and radial velocities do not agree with a single cluster, indicating that we are observing two populations of massive stars in the same line of sight: Masgomas-6a and Masgomas-6b. The first group of massive stars, located at 3.9kpc, contains both Wolf-Rayets and most of the OB-dwarfs; the second group, located at 9.6kpc, hosts the LBV candidate and an evolved population of supergiants. We are able to identify massive stars at two Galactic arms, but we cannot clearly identify whether these massive stars form clusters or associations.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/V/127A
- Title:
- MASH Catalogues of Planetary Nebulae
- Short Name:
- V/127A
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Macquarie/AAO/Strasbourg H{alpha} Planetary Nebula Catalogue (MASH) contains 903 new true, likely and possible Galactic Planetary Nebulae (PNe) discovered from the AAO/UKST H{alpha} survey of the southern Galactic plane. The combination of depth, resolution, uniformity, and areal coverage of the H {alpha}survey has opened up an hitherto unexplored region of parameter space permitting the detection of this significant new PN sample. This catalogue includes also the spectra of the PNe as FITS files (in the "sp" subdirectory), and a gallery of images created as a combination of the H{alpha} and short red images of the survey. The second part, MASH-II (table mash2.dat) consists of over 300 true, likely and possible new Galactic PNe found after re-examination of the entire AAO/UKST H{alpha} survey of the Southern Galactic Plane in digital form. Over 240 of these new candidates were confirmed as bona fide PNe on the basis of spectroscopic observations. The spectra of this supplement will be available in the future.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/699/800
- Title:
- Mass functions of active black holes
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/699/800
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present mass functions of distant actively accreting supermassive black holes residing in luminous quasars discovered in the Large Bright Quasar Survey (LBQS), the Bright Quasar Survey (BQS), and the Fall Equatorial Stripe of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The quasars cover a wide range of redshifts from the local universe to z=5 and were subject to different selection criteria and flux density limits. This makes these samples complementary and can help us gain additional insight on the true underlying black hole mass distribution free from selection effects and mass estimation errors through future studies. We present the relationships used to estimate the black hole mass based on the MgII emission line; the relations are calibrated to the H{beta} and CIV relations by means of several thousand high-quality SDSS spectra. Mass estimates of the individual black holes of these samples are also presented.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/617/A66
- Title:
- Massive eclipsing SB2 in Arches cluster spectra
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/617/A66
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have carried out a spectroscopic variability survey of some of the most massive stars in the Arches cluster, using K-band observations obtained with SINFONI on the VLT. One target, F2, exhibits substantial changes in radial velocity; in combination with new KMOS and archival SINFONI spectra, its primary component is found to undergo radial velocity variation with a period of 10.483+/-0.002d and an amplitude of ~350km/s. A secondary radial velocity curve is also marginally detectable. We reanalyse archival NAOS-CONICA photometric survey data in combination with our radial velocity results to confirm this object as an eclipsing SB2 system, and the first binary identified in the Arches. We model it as consisting of an 82+/-12M_{sun}_ WN8-9h primary and a 60+/-8M_{sun}_ O5-6 Ia+ secondary, and as having a slightly eccentric orbit, implying an evolutionary stage prior to strong binary interaction. As one of four X-ray bright Arches sources previously proposed as colliding-wind massive binaries, it may be only the first of several binaries to be discovered in this cluster, presenting potential challenges to recent models for the Arches' age and composition. It also appears to be one of the most massive binaries detected to date; the primary's calculated initial mass of >~120M_{sun}_ would arguably make this the most massive binary known in the Galaxy.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/646/A83
- Title:
- 12 massive lensing clusters MUSE observations
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/646/A83
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Spectroscopic surveys of massive galaxy clusters reveal the properties of faint background galaxies thanks to the magnification provided by strong gravitational lensing. We present a systematic analysis of integral-field- spectroscopy observations of 12 massive clusters, conducted with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE). All data were taken under very good seeing conditions (~0.6") in effective exposure times between two and 15 hrs per pointing, for a total of 125 hrs. Our observations cover a total solid angle of ~23-arcmin^2^ in the direction of clusters, many of which were previously studied by the MAssive Clusters Survey (MACS), Frontier Fields (FFs), Grism Lens-Amplified Survey from Space (GLASS) and Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) programmes. The achieved emission line detection limit at 5sigma for a point source varies between (0.77-1.5)x10^-18^erg/s/cm^2^ at 7000{AA}. We present our developed strategy to reduce these observational data, detect continuum sources and line emitters in the datacubes, and determine their redshifts. We constructed robust mass models for each cluster to further confirm our redshift measurements using strong-lensing constraints, and identified a total of 312 strongly lensed sources producing 939 multiple images. The final redshift catalogues contain more than 3300 robust redshifts, of which 40% are for cluster members and ~30% are for lensed Lyman-alpha emitters. Fourteen percent of all sources are line emitters that are not seen in the available HST images, even at the depth of the FFs (~29 AB). We find that the magnification distribution of the lensed sources in the high- magnification regime (mu=2-25) follows the theoretical expectation of N(z){prop.to}mu^-2^. The quality of this dataset, number of lensed sources, and number of strong-lensing constraints enables detailed studies of the physical properties of both the lensing cluster and the background galaxies. The full data products from this work, including the datacubes, catalogues, extracted spectra, ancillary images, and mass models, are made available to the community.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/638/A157
- Title:
- Massive O-type stars near ZAMS elusive detection
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/638/A157
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The apparent lack of massive O-type stars near the Zero Age Main Sequence, or ZAMS, (at ages <2Myr) has been a topic widely discussed in the last 40 years. Different explanations for the elusive detection of these young massive stars have been proposed from both the observational and theoretical side, but no firm conclusions have been reached yet. The aim of this work is to perform a reassessment of this empirical result benefiting from the high quality spectroscopic observations of (more than 400) Galactic O-type stars gathered by the IACOB and OWN surveys. We use effective temperatures and surface gravities resulting from a homogeneous, semi-automatized, IACOB-GBAT/FASTWIND spectroscopic analysis to locate our sample of stars in the Kiel and spectroscopic Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagrams. We evaluate the completeness of our magnitude limited sample of stars - as well as the existence of potential observational biases affecting the compiled sample - using information from the Galactic O star catalog (GOSC). We discuss limitations and possible systematics of our analysis methodology, and compare our results with other recent studies using smaller samples of Galactic O-type stars. We mainly base our discussion on the distribution of stars in the spectroscopic HR diagram in order to avoid the use of still uncertain distances to most of the stars in our sample. However, we also perform a more detailed study of the young cluster Trumpler-14 as an illustrative example of how Gaia cluster distances can help to construct the associated classical HR diagram. We find that the apparent lack of massive O-type stars near the zero-age main sequence with initial evolutionary masses in the range between ~30 and 70M_{sun}_ still persist despite using spectroscopic results from a large, non-biased sample of stars. We do not find any correlations between the dearth of stars close to the ZAMS and obvious observational biases, limitations of our analysis methodology, and/or the use of one example spectroscopic HR diagram instead of the classical one. Finally, by investigating the impact of the efficiency of mass accretion during the formation process of massive stars, we conclude that an adjustment of the mass accretion rate towards lower values than canonically assumed could reconcile the hotter boundary of the empirical distribution of optically detected O-type stars in the spectroscopic HR diagram and the theoretical birthline for stars with masses above 30M_{sun}_. Last, we also discuss how the presence of a small sample of O2-O3.5 stars found much closer to the ZAMS than the main distribution of Galactic O-type star could be explained in the context of this scenario taking also into account the effect of non-standard star evolution (e.g. binary interaction, mergers, and/or homogeneous evolution).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/639/A157
- Title:
- Massive O-type stars near ZAMS elusive detection (Holgado+, 2020)
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/639/A157
- Date:
- 30 Jun 2020 06:56:58
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- List of the 285 stars with spectroscopic parameters obtained in this work. We performed an exhaustive search for spectra of these stars in modern high resolution spectroscopic databases. The spectrum with best quality, in terms of signal-to-noise ratio, was considered for the quantitative spectroscopic analysis and a multi-epoch characterization.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/598/A30
- Title:
- Massive star forming molecular clumps Tkin
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/598/A30
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- For a general understanding of the physics involved in the star formation process, measurements of physical parameters such as temperature and density are indispensable. The chemical and physical properties of dense clumps of molecular clouds are strongly affected by the kinetic temperature. Therefore, this parameter is essential for a better understanding of the interstellar medium. Formaldehyde, a molecule which traces the entire dense molecular gas, appears to be the most reliable tracer to directly measure the gas kinetic temperature.We aim to determine the kinetic temperature with spectral lines from formaldehyde and to compare the results with those obtained from ammonia lines for a large number of massive clumps.Three 218 GHz transitions (J_KAKC_=3_03_-2_02_, 3_22_-2_21_, and 3_21_-2_20_) of para-H_2_CO were observed with the 15m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) toward 30 massive clumps of the Galactic disk at various stages of high-mass star formation. Using the RADEX non-LTE model, we derive the gas kinetic temperature modeling the measured para-H_2_CO 3_22_-2_21_/3_03_-2_02_ and 3_21_-2_20_/3_03_-2_02_ ratios. The gas kinetic temperatures derived from the para-H2CO (3_21_-2_20_/3_03_-2_02_) line ratios range from 30 to 61K with an average of 46K. A comparison of kinetic temperature derived from para-H_2_CO, NH3, and the dust emission indicates that in many cases para-H_2_CO traces a similar kinetic temperature to the NH_3_ (2,2)/(1,1) transitions and the dust associated with the HII regions. Distinctly higher temperatures are probed by para-H_2_CO in the clumps associated with outflows/shocks. Kinetic temperatures obtained from para-H_2_CO trace turbulence to a higher degree than NH_3_ (2,2)/(1,1) in the massive clumps. The non-thermal velocity dispersions of para-H_2_CO lines are positively correlated with the gas kinetic temperature. The massive clumps are significantly influenced by supersonic non-thermal motions.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/247/17
- Title:
- Massive stars in APOGEE2 Survey. III.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/247/17
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have applied the semi-empirical spectral analysis, developed by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)-IV/Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment 2 (APOGEE2) Massive Star Team, to a large sample of new O- and B-type stars identified along the Sagittarius spiral arm, in the direction of the southern star clusters NGC3603 and NGC3576. We obtained H-band spectra for 265 point sources, using the APOGEE2-S spectrograph at the du Pont Telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory. We analyzed the associated spectral features deriving spectral types, as well as the massive star distribution along the line of sight. From a total of 265 science targets, 95 are classified as mid- to late-O-type stars (for which only 10 O-type stars are previously known in the literature), 38 are found to be early- to mid-B-type stars, and 32 are classified as either yellow or blue supergiants, completing a total of 165 massive stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/873/66
- Title:
- Massive stars in SDSS/APOGEE-2. II. W3-W4-W5
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/873/66
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In this work, we have applied a semi-empirical spectral classification method for OB-stars using the APOGEE spectrograph to a sample of candidates in the W3-W4-W5 (W345) complexes. These massive star-forming regions span over 200pc across the Perseus arm and have a notorious population of massive stars, from which a large fraction are members of various embedded and young open clusters. From 288 APOGEE spectra showing H-band spectral features typical of O- and B-type sources, 46 probably correspond to previously unknown O-type stars. Therefore, we confirm that Br11-Br13 together with HeII {lambda}16923 (7-12) and HeII {lambda}15723 (7-13) lines contained in the APOGEE spectral bands are useful in providing spectral classification down to one spectral sub-class for massive stars in regions as distant as d~2kpc. The large number of newly found O-type stars as well as the numerous intermediate-mass population confirm that W345 is a very efficient massive star factory, with an integral stellar population probably amounting several thousand solar masses.